AI Article Synopsis

  • Iodine-based X-ray contrast agents (I-XCA) provide better image quality at lower X-ray energies (50-80 kVp), while rhenium-based X-ray contrast agents (Re-XCA) outperform I-XCA at higher energies (above 120 kVp).
  • The study demonstrated that using copper filters enhances the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of Re-XCA significantly, with improvements reaching up to 59.1% at 120 kVp with thicker filters.
  • Monte Carlo simulations indicated that using Re-XCA can reduce the absorbed dose during X-ray imaging while maintaining high-quality images, potentially benefiting medical procedures involving catheters by improving their visibility and placement accuracy.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The majority of X-ray contrast agents (XCA) are made with iodine, but iodine-based XCA (I-XCA) exhibit low contrast in high kVp X-rays due to iodine's low atomic number ( = 53) and K-edge (33.1 keV). While rhenium is a transition metal with a high atomic number ( = 75) and K-edge (71.7 keV), the utilization of rhenium-based XCA (Re-XCA) in X-ray imaging techniques has not been studied in depth. Our study had two objectives: (1) to compare both the image quality and the absorbed dose of I- and Re-XCA and (2) to prepare and image a rhenium-doped scaffold. . I- and Re-XCA were prepared and imaged from 50 to 120 kVp by Micro-computed tomography (CT) and digital radiography and from 120 to 220 kVp by planar X-ray imaging. The scans were repeated using 0.1 to 1.6 mm thick copper filters to harden the X-ray beam. A rhenium-doped scaffold was prepared via electrospinning, used to coat catheters, and imaged at 90 kVp by CT.

Results: I-XCA have a greater contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) at 50 and 80 kVp, but Re-XCA have a greater CNR at >120 kVp. The difference in CNR is increased as the thickness of the copper filters is increased. For instance, the percent CNR improvement of rhenium over iodine is 14.2% with a 0.6 mm thick copper filter, but it is 59.1% with a 1.6 mm thick copper filter, as shown at 120 kVp by CT. Upon coating them with a rhenium-doped scaffold, the catheters became radiopaque.

Conclusions: Using Monte Carlo simulations, we showed that it is possible to reduce the absorbed dose of high kVp X-rays while allowing the acquisition of high-quality images. Furthermore, radiopaque catheters have the potential of enhancing the contrast during catheterizations and helping physicians to place catheters inside patients more rapidly and precisely.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8575601PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/1250360DOI Listing

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